Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario
Transcription
Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario
MAGMATIC NICKEL-COPPER-PLATINUM GROUP ELEMENT DEPOSITS O. ROGER ECKSTRAND AND LARRY J. HULBERT Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0E8 Corresponding author’s email: lhulbert@nrcan.gc.ca Abstract Magmatic deposits containing exploitable quantities of nickel, copper, and platinum group elements (PGE) are associated with variable quantities of localized sulphide concentrations in mafic and ultramafic rocks. Ni-Cu deposits, nickel being the main economic commodity, are associated with high concentrations of sulphides, and the host bodies are classified based on the nature of the confining magmatic environment: (1) meteorite-impact, (2) rift and continental flood basalt, (3) komatiitic, and (4) other related mafic/ultramafic bodies. Platinum group element deposits are also confined to mafic/ultramafic bodies, but are associated with low quantities of sulphides. Reef-type or stratiform PGE deposits form in large, well-layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions, whereas magmatic breccia-type deposits occurs in stock-like or layered bodies. The economics and rarity of such deposits with respect to number, grade, tonnage, and mining districts are outlined. In addition, the geological attributes of the various deposit types and subtypes are documented. Exploration models based on district and local scales are discussed, as well as recent advances and knowledge gaps in this field. Résumé Les gîtes magmatiques renfermant des quantités exploitables de nickel, de cuivre et d’éléments du groupe du platine (ÉGP) sont associés à des concentrations localisées de sulfures, en quantités plus ou moins importantes, dans les roches mafiques et ultramafiques. Les gîtes de Ni-Cu, où le nickel est la principale substance utile, sont associés à de fortes concentrations de sulfures et les corps hôtes sont classés d’après la nature des milieux magmatiques qui les renferment : (1) impact météoritique, (2) basaltes de rift et de plateaux continentaux, (3) unités komatiitiques et (4) autres corps mafiques/ultramafiques connexes. Les gîtes d’éléments du groupe du platine sont également restreints aux corps mafiques et ultramafiques, mais sont associés à de faibles quantités de sulfures. Les gîtes d’ÉGP de type horizon minéralisé ou minéralisation stratiforme sont formés dans de grandes intrusions mafiques/ultramafiques bien stratifiées, alors que les gîtes de type brèche magmatique se forment dans des corps s’apparentant à des stocks ou dans des massifs stratifiés. La valeur et la rareté de ces gîtes sont soulignées en termes de nombres, de teneurs de tonnages et de districts miniers. Les attributs géologiques des divers types et sous-types de gîtes sont en outre documentés. Des modèles d’exploration à l’échelle du district et à l’échelle locale sont discutés et les progrès récents dans ce domaine ainsi que les lacunes dans nos connaissances sont soulignés. Definition A broad group of deposits containing nickel, copper, and platinum group elements (PGE) occur as sulphide concentrations associated with a variety of mafic and ultramafic magmatic rocks (Eckstrand et al., 2004; Naldrett, 2004). The magmas originate in the upper mantle and contain small amounts of nickel, copper, PGE, and variable but minor amounts of S (the one exception to this source of magma is the Sudbury Igneous Complex, or SIC, which will be discussed separately). The magmas ascend through the crust and cool as they encounter cooler crustal rocks. If the original S content of the magma is sufficient, or if S is added from crustal wall rocks, a separate sulphide liquid forms as droplets dispersed throughout the magma. Because the partition coefficients of nickel, copper, and PGE as well as iron favour sulphide liquid over silicate liquid, these elements preferentially transfer into the sulphide droplets from the surrounding magma. The sulphide droplets tend to sink toward the base of the magma because of their greater density, and form sulphide concentrations. On further cooling, the sulphide liquid crystallizes to form the ore deposits that contain these metals. Among such deposits, two main types are distinguishable. In the first, Ni-Cu sulphide, Ni and Cu are the main economic commodities. These occur as sulphide-rich ores that are associated with differentiated mafic and/or ultramafic sills and stocks, and ultramafic (komatiitic) volcanic flows and sills. The second type is exploited principally for PGE, which are associated with sparsely dispersed sulphides in very large to medium-sized, typically mafic/ultramafic layered intrusions. In Ni-Cu sulphide deposits (the first type), Ni constitutes the main economic commodity, generally at grades of about 1 to 3 percent. Copper may be either a coproduct or by-product, and Co, PGE, and Au are the usual by-products. However, in some cases, such as Noril’sk-Talnakh, PGE may constitute highly significant coproducts. Other commodities recovered in some cases include Ag, S, Se, and Te. These metals are all associated with the sulphides, which generally make up more than 10 percent of the ore. The mafic and ultramafic magmatic bodies that host the Ni-Cu sulphide ores are diverse in form and composition, and can be subdivided into the following four subtypes: 1. A meteorite-impact mafic melt sheet that contains basal sulphide ores (Sudbury, Ontario is the only known example). 2. Rift and continental flood basalt-associated mafic sills and dyke-like bodies (Noril’sk-Talnakh, Russia; Jinchuan, Eckstrand, O.R., and Hulbert, L.J., 2007, Magmatic nickel-copper-platinum group element deposits, in Goodfellow, W.D., ed., Mineral Deposits of Canada: A Synthesis of Major Deposit Types, District Metallogeny, the Evolution of Geological Provinces, and Exploration Methods: Geological Association of Canada, Mineral Deposits Division, Special Publication No. 5, p. 205-222. O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert China; Duluth Complex, Minnesota; Muskox, Nunavut; and Crystal Lake intrusion, Ontario). 3. Komatiitic (magnesium-rich) volcanic flows and related sill-like intrusions (Thompson, Manitoba; Raglan and Marbridge, Quebec; Langmuir, Ontario; Kambalda and Agnew, Australia; Pechenga, Russia; Shangani, Trojan, and Hunter’s Road, Zimbabwe). 4. Other mafic/ultramafic intrusions (Voisey’s Bay, Labrador; Lynn Lake, Manitoba; Giant Mascot, British Columbia; Kotalahti, Finland; Råna, Norway; and Selebi-Phikwe, Botswana). The PGE of the second type of deposit include Os, Ir, Ru, Rh, Pt, and Pd. Platinum and Pd are the most abundant of these and determine the economic value of these ores, although Rh, Ni, Cu, and Au are commonly recovered as well. 1. PGE-dominant magmatic sulphide ores are associated with mafic/ultramafic intrusions. There are two principal subtypes of deposits: 2. Reef-type or stratiform PGE deposits, which occur in well layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions (Merensky Reef and UG-2 chromitite layer of the Bushveld Complex, South Africa; J-M Reef of the Stillwater Complex, Montana; Main sulphide zone in the Great Dyke, Zimbabwe). 3. Magmatic breccia type, which occurs in stock-like or layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions (Platreef deposits of the northern Bushveld Complex, South Africa; Lac des Iles deposit and Marathon deposit, Ontario). Mafic/ultramafic rocks host other types of mineralization as well. These include lateritic nickel deposits, placer Pt deposits, chromite deposits, and titaniferous magnetite deposits. None of these are discussed further. Economic Characteristics Magmatic Ni-Cu sulphide deposits provide most of the Ni produced in the world and continue to have substantial reserves. However, lateritic Ni deposits, formed from the weathering of ultramafic rocks, are also substantial sources of Ni, and have global reserves greater than those of Ni-Cu sulphide deposits. Lateritic Ni deposits do not occur in Canada, but will probably in time become the main source of nickel. Magmatic PGE deposits and Ni-Cu sulphide deposits are the source of essentially all of the world’s platinum group elements. Placer deposits have also been mined for Pt in many parts of the world, but are of little significance in Canada and appear to have little potential elsewhere. Some Ni-Cu-PGE deposits occur as individual sulphide bodies associated with magmatic mafic and/or ultramafic bodies. Others occur as groups of sulphide bodies associated with one or more related magmatic bodies in areas or belts up to tens, even hundreds of kilometres long. Such groups of deposits are known as districts (e.g. Sudbury, Thompson, Noril’sk-Talnakh, Kambalda, Raglan). In total there are 142 Ni-Cu-PGE deposits and districts in the world for which grade and ore tonnage data have been reported that contain more than 100 000 tonnes of resources and/or production, as shown in Figure 1. These include deposits that are economic or possibly economic. The distribution of these deposits in Canada is shown in Figure 2. Among the global deposits/districts FIGURE 1. World map (after Chorlton, 2003) showing magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE sulphide deposits having resources and/or production greater than 100,000 tonnes of ore. 206 Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits Canalask Wellgreen Raglan horizon Ferguson Lake Nickel Mountain (E and L) Rankin Inlet Voisey's Bay Delta Rottenstone Lynn Lake Nemeiben Lake Thompson Manibridge Namew Lake Alexo Dumont sill Bowden Montcalm Langmuir Bucko gabbro McWatters Minago Cat Lake Gordon Lake Thierry Hart Dumbarton Maskwa West Giant Nickel Expo-Ungava Lac des Isles Shebandowan Great Lakes Nickel Marathon Redstone Texmont Marbridge La Force Lorraine Lac Kelly Midrim St Stephen intrusion Sothman Sudbury Macassa Kanichee FIGURE 2. Geological map of Canada (after Wheeler et al., 1996), showing the distribution of magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE sulphide deposits with resources and/or production greater than 100 000 tonnes of ore. Ni-Cu deposits are shown in yellow, with PGE deposits shown in white. there are 51 Ni-Cu deposits/districts and 5 PGE deposits/districts with greater than 10 million metric tonnes (MT), and 13 Ni-Cu deposits/districts and 2 PGE deposits/districts with greater than 100 Mt. Grade and Tonnage Characteristics Among Ni-Cu deposits, Ni grades are typically between 0.7 and 3 percent, and Cu grades are between 0.2 and 2 percent (Fig. 3). Ore tonnages of individual deposits range from a few hundred thousands to a few tens of millions (Fig. 3A). Two giant Ni-Cu districts stand out above all the rest in the world: Sudbury, Ontario, and Noril’sk-Talnakh, Russia, with ore tonnages of 1645 and 1903 Mt respectively (Fig. 4). Other major Ni-Cu districts include the Thompson, Voisey’s Bay, and Raglan districts in Canada, and Jinchuan (China), Kambalda (Australia), and Pechenga (Russia). The most important platinum-rich PGE district in the world is the Bushveld Complex, South Africa (Pt/Pd = 1.35), which contains two major types of PGE deposits. The next in importance is the Noril’sk-Talnakh district, which is exceptionally Pd-rich (Pd/Pt = 3.5) as a by-product of its Ni-Cu ores. Stillwater, U.S. is also a significant producer of unusually rich PGE ores (Pd/Pt = 3.6). Canada’s only primary producing deposit is the Lac des Iles Pd deposit (Pd/Pt = 9.2). The Sudbury district, because of its size, also produces significant amounts of PGE, although PGE tenors are comparatively low. Grades and tonnages of global magmatic Ni-Cu deposits (Fig. 4) show that Sudbury and Noril’sk-Talnakh are the only districts that contain in excess of 10 million tons of contained Ni. The other important districts tend to have Ni contents of about 1 to 6 million tonnes. Geological Attributes Magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE deposits are consistently found in association with mafic and/or ultramafic magmatic bodies, but these parent bodies occur in diverse geological settings. Their ages are predominantly Archean and Paleoproterozoic (Fig. 3E). In the following account, the two main types, (1) Ni-Cu and (2) PGE, and the four subtypes of Ni-Cu will be treated separately. Each account will begin with regional settings and proceed with progressively more detailed characterization of the deposits, including local geological setting, associated bounding rocks, the magmatic host rocks, and the ores themselves. Nickel-Copper Deposits As noted above, these ores are characterized by an abundance of sulphide. Much of the S in the sulphides was de- 207 (A) Number of deposits 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5 >400 mT 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Number of deposits O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 350 Million tons (10 mT intervals) 30 20 10 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 Pa Ni (wt %) (C) Number of deposits 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 Cu (wt %) rived by assimilation (e.g., Grinenko, 1985). It is likely that the high content of S in the magma caused over saturation of S in the magma, thus producing large quantities of sulphide liquid. As stated above, Ni, Cu, and PGE partition preferentially into sulphide liquid relative to silicate liquid. On cooling, the liquid sulphide crystallizes over a large temperature range to eventually form the common mineral assemblage dominated by pyrrhotite-pentlandite-chalcopyrite. Meteorite-Impact Subtype Sudbury is the only known representative of this type of Ni-Cu deposit. Because meteorite impacts are random events on the earth’s surface, there is no possible regional geological control on their distribution, with the exception that subsequent geological events could obscure or obliterate their traces. In the case of the Sudbury Igneous Complex (Fig. 5), it is well preserved although strongly deformed by 208 10 15 PGE (g/t) 20 (E) Number of deposits 40 0 5 Ar c pr hea o n M t e es ro op zo ic ro Ne tero op zo ic ro te ro zo ic Pa le oz oi O c rd ov ici an Si lu ria n De vo ni an Pe rm ia n Tr ia ss i c Ju ra ss Cr i c et ac eo us Te rti ar y 50 0 80 70 60 3.5 504.0 40 30 20 10 0 (B) le o Number of deposits 60 (D) Age FIGURE 3. Range and distribution of (A) ore tonnages, (B) Ni grades, (C) Cu grades, (D) PGE grades, and (E) ages of magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE sulphide deposits. (Prepared from data in Eckstrand et al., 2004: in some cases modified.) Because of inconsistency in reported PGE grades, the values used are as follows: Pt + Pd for Bushveld, Stillwater, Lac des Iles, and Marathon; PGE for Hartley; and (Pt+Pd+Rh+Au) for Munni Munni. later compressional events. The meteorite impact took place at 1850 Ma, at the boundary between Neoarchean gneisses (about 2711 Ma) to the north and Paleoproterozoic volcano-sedimentary rocks of the overlying Huronian Supergroup (about 2450 Ma) to the south (Pye et al., 1984; Naldrett, 1999). The impact produced a crater some 200 km in diametre, as well as radiating and concentric fracture/breccia zones that penetrated the surrounding wall rocks for distances of tens of kilometres. The impact generated a high-temperature melt layer that occupied the floor of the impact crater. On cooling, the melt differentiated into a lower norite unit and an overlying granophyre, separated by a thinner gabbro layer. Contacts between these units are gradational, and finer-scale layering is absent. A discontinuous, more mafic basal unit termed the sublayer contains most of the Ni-Cu ores and abundant xenolithic clasts (Souch et al., 1969; Pattison, 1979; Naldrett et al., 1984). The melt also intruded some of the radiating breccia zones, forming many kilometres long quartz diorite dykes (offsets) extending outward from the SIC, and these also contain Ni-Cu ores (Cochrane, 1984). Subsequent regional overthrusting from the south compressed the southern half of the SIC and produced the presently exposed elongate basin 65 km long and 27 km across (Shanks and Schwerdtner, 1991). The inward dip of the com- Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits Ni% vs ore tonnage Kambalda Voisey s Bay Thompson Pechanga Jinchuan Sudbury Agnew Noril sk Mount Keith Raglan 1 10 ,0 00 Ni % (A) 10 ,0 Duluth 00 0.1 1, 00 0 Cu % 0, Jinchuan 10 ,0 00 ,0 Pechanga 0.1 0, 0 0 00 00 0 100 00 0, ,0 00 10 00 10 10 1, 10 1 0 10 0.1 00 1, Thompson 0.01 0.01 1000 10000 Ore, million tonnes PGE g/t vs ore tonnage (C) 10 ,0 00 10 0, 00 1, 0 100 PGE g/t 00 0 1000 10000 100 Sudbury Raglan Noril sk Voisey s Bay Duluth 1 00 0, 10 00 0 ,0 00 10 ,0 00 Stillwater 10 1 00 10 Ore, million tonnes Cu% vs ore tonnage (B) 10 1000 0, 00 0 1 10 ,0 00 0 0.1 10 1, 10 10 0.01 .01 Munni Hartley Marathon 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 0, 00 0, 00 0 Lac des Isles Bushveld Ore, million tonnes 1000 10000 FIGURE 4. Grade and tonnage plots of global magmatic Ni-Cu sulphide deposits. (A) Tonnages vs. Ni grades; (B) Tonnages vs. Cu grades; (C) Tonnages vs. PGE grades. (Prepared from data in Eckstrand et al., 2004: in some cases modified.) Inclined contours show quantities of contained metals in each figure; tonnes for Ni and Cu, and kg for PGE. plex averages about 30° along the less-deformed north range, and 45° to 60° along the strongly deformed south range. The total thickness of the complex is about 2.5 km. The impacted country rocks contained significant amounts of S in the form of sulphides. These were incorporated in the initial super-liquidus melt as dissolved S, but with cooling, the melt became saturated with respect to S. Sulphide liquid was thus produced, which extracted Ni, Cu, and PGE from the silicate melt. Another factor contributing to formation of sulphide was the reduced solubility of sulphide in the melt caused by the mixing of mafic and felsic target rocks. The liquid sulphide, along with abundant fragmental material, segregated into a basal mafic noritic unit (sublayer) and collect- ed in depressions (embayments) along the base of the melt sheet. The Murray mine is in such an embayment (Fig. 5; Souch et al., 1969). Sulphide liquid also accompanied melt into the offsets. On cooling, the sulphide liquid crystallized to form Ni-Cu-PGE ores. In some of the embayments, sulphide melt remaining after partial crystallization migrated downward from the SIC into breccia zones in the footwall rocks to produce particularly Cu and PGE-rich sulphide ore veins and masses up to 400 m below the sublayer. The resulting orebodies associated with the sublayer at the base of the intrusion form irregular lenticular sulphiderich masses, with the longest dimension plunging steeply as at the Murray mine on the South Range (Fig. 6A), and the Strathcona, McCreedy East, and Fraser mines on the North Range (Fig. 6B; Coats and Snajdr, 1984). Clusters of such orebodies, similarly oriented, lie in the embayments and persist to great depths as at the Creighton mine. The orebodies in the offsets form discontinuous sulphide-rich sheets or lenses with steep dips subparallel to the associated quartz diorite offset. An example is the orebody in the Copper Cliff mine shown in Figure 6C (Cochrane, 1984). A different kind of ore zone occurs at the Falconbridge East mine, where the ore is irregularly strung out as discontinuous sheets along the Main fault, which separates the felsic norite of the SIC from the Stobie volcanics (Fig. 6D; Owen and Coats, 1984). The deep Cu-PGE-rich ores in the footwall below the SIC form sets of subparallel stringers and veins of massive sulphides (Fig. 6B; Coats and Snajdr, 1984). The sulphide ores consist of the typical magmatic sulphide minerals. In general order of abundance, they include pyrrhotite, pentlandite, chalcopyrite, and pyrite. Bornite is present in copper-rich ores, and South Range ores typically contain arsenic minerals, including niccolite, maucherite, gersdorfite, and cobaltite. The platinum group elements occur as microscopic grains of numerous minerals, the most abundant of which are michenerite (PdBiTe), moncheite (PtTe2), and sperrylite (PtAs2). Sudbury ores have many of the same textural features as other magmatic Ni-Cu sulphide ores. Massive ores (Fig. 7C) consist mainly of an annealed mosaic of subequant pyrrhotite grains with shreddy interstitial pentlandite. Breccia ores (Fig. 7D) contain rock clasts and silicate grains suspended in a matrix of sulphide (mostly pyrrhotite with patchy grains of pentlandite; chalcopyrite often penetrates the rock clasts). A distinctive feature of Sudbury sulphide-rich ores and the hosting sublayer is the presence of clasts of ultramafic rock, not exposed elsewhere but likely unmelted residue of one of the rocks impacted by the meteorite. Rift and Continental Flood Basalt-Associated Subtype Ni-Cu deposits of the rift and continental flood basaltassociated subtype are the products of the magmatism that accompanies intracrustal rifting events. They include the largest deposit, Noril’sk-Talnakh, (12.6 MT of contained Ni), and several other large deposits, for example, Jinchuan (Chai and Naldrett, 1992) and Duluth. The features that these deposits tend to have in common are that they are associated with large magma systems, and that within these systems the Ni-Cu sulphide ores tend to be associated with conduits 209 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert N Milnet 0 km 10 Nickel Offset Whistle North Range Shaft Strathcona Coleman Longvac Fecunis Capreol Fraser Fecunis Lake Levack Levack West McCreedy Boundary Hardy Windy L. Norduna Chelmsford L. L McKim . Murray Trillabelle Little StobieGarson Stobie Frood SUDBURY L. L. Collins Ramsey Lake L. Sultana Chicago Clarabelle Victoria East Falconbridge Falconbridge Copper Cliff North Copper Cliff South Creighton Worthington Sudbury Igneaous Complex Proterozoic LEGEND Granophyre Chemsford Formation Quartz-rich gabbro Onwatin Formation Norite Onaping Formation Sublayer Creighton, Murray granites Quartzite Greywacke, volcanic rocks Archean Granite gneiss and plutons South Range Shear Zone Fault Olivine diabase dykes Ni-Cu-PGE deposits FIGURE 5. Sudbury Igneous Complex: geological map (assembled from Pattison, 1979; Naldrett et al., 1984; Naldrett, 1989; Shanks and Schwerdtner, 1991). or feeders to the larger igneous masses (in this last respect, Duluth is an exception in which the low-grade Ni-Cu sulphides have not yet proven to be economic). Much of the sulphide has been derived by contamination of the magma through incorporation of S from adjoining wall rocks. Once formed, and if in sufficient quantity, the sulphides tend to settle gravitationally within the moving magma, and collect in the conduits at points where magma velocity is reduced. The sulphides have probably experienced progressive enrichment by repeated extraction of additional metals from successive pulses of magma moving through the conduits (Maier et al., 2001). Noril’sk-Talnakh: The Ni-Cu-PGE ores of the Noril’skTalnakh district (Duzhikov et al., 1992; Naldrett and Lightfoot, 1992) are spatially associated with the huge Siberian flood basalt magmatic suite. In the Noril’sk-Talnakh area, the sedimentary strata form a gentle north–south-trending syncline. Intruded into this sequence are elongate, gently 210 dipping sill-like mafic bodies that underlie the 3.5 km thick lava sequence. These are the units with which the ores are associated (Fig. 8), and that are considered to be feeders to the overlying volcanic rocks. All the ore-bearing sills lie within 7 km of the NNE trending Karayelakh fault, which is thought to be part of the conduit system. The sills have thicknesses of a few tens of metres, lateral extents of a few hundred metres, and lengths of a few kilometres. They consist of a variety of layer-like gabbro-dolerite units (Fig. 9; Distler, 1994). The lowermost unit consists of an olivine-free gabbro-dolerite contact facies overlain by coarser-grained taxitic olivine gabbro-dolerite, which passes upwards into picritic gabbro-dolerite. Olivine-free gabbro-dolerite and anorthosite units make up the upper portions of these bodies. The sills are enveloped by metamorphic aureoles of exceptional thickness (up to 200 metres) and, hence, are considered to have been conduits for the passage of very large volumes of magma. Three distinct types of Ni-Cu-PGE ore occur in specific Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits Surface (A) (C) Footwall 0 Shear 0 200m 200m N Norite Ragged disseminated sulphide Interstitial sulphide in norite Gabbro-peridotite inclusion sulphide Inclusion massive sulphide LEGEND Sudbury breccia Country rock Sulphide Quartz diorite LEGEND (D) 4525 Level Felsic norite Mafic norite, sublayer Footwall breccia Levack gneiss Mafic - ultramafic rock Main Zone Diabase 85 Ore Fault (B) Strathcona 82 E Main 40 LEGEND South Range Norite No .1 Fau HW lt 0 N 10m 84 E Fault 70 85 Stobie Formation 75 Nickel-copper sulphide Fault McCreedy East Deep Copper zone 0 Fraser Depth Fraser No. 2 Fault 400m FIGURE 6. Sudbury ore deposits: geological maps and sections. (A) Murray mine (after Souch et al., 1969); (B) Strathcona, McCreedy East and Fraser mines (after Coats and Snajdr, 1984); (C) Copper Cliff South mine (after Cochrane, 1984); (D) Falconbridge East mine (after Owen and Coats, 1984). associations with the mineralized sills, and contribute to the total resources of the Noril’sk-Talnakh ore field (Table 1). 1. Massive sulphide ores occur as flat-lying sheets and lenses at the base of the sills, in some cases protruding downward into the footwall rocks (Figs. 8, 9). One such massive sulphide orebody attains a thickness of over 50 m and lateral dimensions of hundreds of metres. Some of the larger orebodies display remarkable sulphide zonation, ranging from pyrrhotite dominated chalcopyrite-pentlandite assemblages in the outermost and lower parts, through progressively more copper-rich zones, to mainly Cu sulphides, chalcopyrite, cubanite, and mooihoekite together with pentlandite in the central upper parts (Stekhin, 1994). The latter can TABLE 1. Noril’sk-Talnakh Ore Field—Measured, Indicated, and Inferred Resources (2003) Ore type Rich (massive) Ore (Mt) 88.7 Ni % 3.42 Cu % 5.38 PGE (g/t) 5–100 Cuprous (Cu breccia) 108.4 0.8 2.64 5–50 Disseminated 1706.3 0.51 1.02 2–10 Total 1903.4 0.66 1.31 have up to 25 to 30 percent Cu, 3 to 6 percent Ni, 50 to 60 ppm Pt, and 60 to 200 ppm Pd. This zonation of sulphides is believed to result from fractionation in situ. The mechanism of early cumulate separation and basal segregation of a pyrrhotite-like iron sulphide leaves a Cu-PGE-rich supernatant liquid to crystallize last. These Ni and Cu-rich massive sulphide ores have been the mainstay of Noril’sk production for much of the district’s history. 2. Copper breccia ores as semiconformable sheet-like zones occupy the upper contacts of the sills with the overlying rocks (stringer-disseminated ores in Fig. 9). The breccia comprises fragments of both the intrusion and wall rocks in a matrix of mainly massive sulphide. Sulphide stringers and disseminations accompany the breccias. 3. Disseminated sulphide ores form lenticular to tabular layers in picritic gabbro-dolerite units within the sills. The sulphides generally take the form of centimetre-size spheres of chalcopyrite, pentlandite, and pyrrhotite dispersed through the host gabbro-dolerite. This was the first ore type mined at Noril’sk; later it declined in importance with the discovery of massive sulphide ores. However, it is presently an important component in mining reserves again due to the high price of platinum. 211 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert ic rift zones or rifted arcs. They are generally composed of strongly folded, basaltic/andesitic volcanic rocks and related sills, siliciclastic sediments, and granitoid intrusions. They have been metamorphosed to greenschist and amphibolite facies, and typically adjoin tonalitic gneiss terranes. Komatiitic rocks form an integral part of some of these greenstone belts. Examples are the Kambalda district and the Mt. Keith deposit, respectively, from two greenstone belts in Western Australia. The second setting is as Paleoproterozoic komatiitic sills associated with rifting at cratonic margins. Prime examples are the Raglan horizon in the Cape Smith-Wkeham Bay Belt of Ungava, Quebec, and the Thompson district of the Thompson Nickel Belt, in northern Manitoba. The komatiitic rocks are set in a sequence of volcano-sedimentary strata unconformably resting on Archean basement and are D weakly (Raglan) to intensely (Thompson) folded and deformed. An additional Paleoproterozoic C example is the Pechenga Belt of Ni-Cu sulphide deposits in the Russian Kola Peninsula (Melezhik et al., 1994). The liquid-equivalent portions of ultramafic komatiitic rocks are magnesium-rich (18%– 32% MgO), and therefore the precursor magmas are very hot and fluid. Because of their primitive (high Mg, Ni) composition, the Ni:Cu ratio of the associated sulphide ores is high, in many cases 10:1 or more. The S in the sulphide ores has been derived in significant proportion by contamination from sulphidic wall rocks. The commonly observed close spatial association of these deposits and their hosts with sulphidic sedimentary footwall rocks, and the similarity of S isotopes and other chemical parametres of the magmatic and sedimentary sulphides strongly FIGURE 7. Typical magmatic Ni-Cu sulphide ore textures: (A) disseminated sulphides, Thompson; (B) matrix-textured sulphides, Lynn Lake; (C) massive sulphides, Lynn Lake; (D) sulphide suggests that the S in these deposits was derived breccia, Lynn Lake. Pyrrhotite=medium gray, pentlandite=light gray, chalcopyrite=yellow, locally from the sediments. This contrasts to silicate gangue=dark gray to black. Photographs courtesy of L.J. Hulbert. some degree with deposits like Noril’sk where, although it is clear that S came from an extraneous source, that source was not likely so near at hand. Noril’sk-Talnakh ores are exceptionally rich in PGE, to Two types of Ni-Cu sulphide ores characterize these dethe degree that the precious metals currently have approxiposits. Sulphide-rich ores comprising massive, breccia, and mately the same value in the ores as the base metals. Noril’sk matrix-textured ores (Fig. 7C, 7D, and 7B, respectively) is the world’s leading producer of Pd, and supplies about 20 consisting of pyrrhotite, pentlandite, and chalcopyrite occur percent of the world’s Pt, second only to the Bushveld. at the basal contact of the hosting ultramafic flows and sills. Komatiitic Volcanic Flow and Sill-Associated Subtype These deposits are generally small, in the order of a few milKomatiitic Ni-Cu deposits are widely distributed in the lion tonnes, and the grades are in the 1.5 to 4 percent range. world, mainly in Neoarchean and Paleoproterozoic terranes The second type, sulphide-poor disseminated ore (Fig. 7A), (Lesher, 1989). Major Ni-Cu producing districts and other forms internal lens-like zones of sparsely dispersed sulphide prominent deposits are found in Australia, Canada, Brazil, blebs that consist mainly of pyrrhotite-pentlandite. Deposits Zimbabwe, Finland, and Karelia (Russia). of this type also occur in both sills and flows, but the largest deposits are in sills, with ore tonnages of 10s to 100s of milThe komatiitic subtype of Ni-Cu sulphide deposits occurs lions, although grades are a modest 0.6 to 0.9 percent Ni. The for the most part in two different settings. One setting is as rich sulphide concentrations of the first type appear to result komatiitic volcanic flows and sills in mostly Neoarchean from significant contamination by S from host rocks, whereas greenstone belts. Greenstone belts are typical terranes found the lower-grade sulphides of the second type may not have in many Archean cratons, and may represent intra-craton- B B A 212 LEGEND Permo-Triassic flood basalts Upper Carboniferous to Upper Permian terrigenous coal-bearing sediments Middle to Upper Devonian carbonate sediments Middle Devonian sulphate sediments Lower to Middle Devonian terrigenous carbonate and sulphate sediments Silurian carbonate sediments Ti-augite dolerites Talnakh group of intrusions Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits Contact gabbro-dolerites; upper taxitic gabbrodolerites;gabbro-dolerites; non-olivine, olivinebearing, olivine-, and olivine-biotite gabbrodolerites Picritic, taxitic, and contact gabbro--dolerites with disseminated Cu-Ni sulphide ores Massive Cu-Ni ores Lower Talnakh intrusion fault Fault FIGURE 8. Noril’sk-Talnakh: west-east geological section (after Duzhikov et al., 1992). Layered series of intrusive and host rocks Geological column Intrusive rocks Volcanogenic & sedimentary metamorphic rocks Sulphide ores Stringer-disseminated ores, veins of massive sulphide Contact gabbro-dolerites, anorthosites, leukocratic anorthitic gabbro Chromite-bearing taxitic gabbroic rocks Prismatic granular gabbrodolerites and diorites Upper gabbro (layered series) Rare sulphide dissemination Quartz-bearing olivine-free gabbro-dolerites Olivine-free and olivinebearing gabbro-dolerites Olivine gabbro-dolerites Main gabbro (layered series) Olivine-biotite gabbro-dolerite Picritic gabbro-dolerites, plagio-olivinites clinopyroxenite, troctolites Plagiochromitites T T Lower gabbro (layered series) T T Disseminated ores with ovoid and interstitial sulphide aggregates Taxitic olivine gabbro dolerite Disseminated ores with xenomorphic stringer-like Olivine-free gabbro-dolerites, sulphide aggregates contact dolerites producers. The deposits in Western Australia are much larger and more economically significant. Kambalda, Western Australia: Ni sulphide ores of the Kambalda district are typical of the basal contact deposits associated with ultramafic flows in greenstone belts (Gresham and LoftusHills, 1981; Gresham, 1986). They occur in the Kambalda komatiite, which is a package of ultramafic flows (2710 Ma) that has been folded into an elongate, doubly plunging anticlinal dome structure about 8 km by 3 km (Fig. 10). The underlying member of this succession is the Lunnon basalt, and the overlying units are a sequence of basalts, slates, and greywackes (2710–2670 Ma). The core of the dome is intruded by a granitoid stock (2662 Ma), whose dykes crosscut the komatiitic hosts and ores. The Kambalda komatiite is made up of a pile of thinner, more extensive sheet flows and thicker channel flows (Perring et al., 1994). The flows that contain ore are channel flows in the lower part of the pile, and may be up to 15 km long and 100 m thick. These flows are commonly interspersed with sulphidic interflow sediment, from which the S that formed the ores was probably derived (Lesher, 1989). Most of the orebodies are at the basal contact of the lowermost channel flows (accounting for 80% of reserves), although some do occur in overlying flows in the lower part of the flow sequence (Fig. 11). The orebodies typically form long tabular or lenticular bodies up to 3 km long and 5 m thick. The ores generally consist of massive and breccia sulphides (Fig. 7C,D) at the base, overlain successively by matrixtextured sulphides (Fig. 7B), and disseminated sulphides (Fig. 7A). The sediment that underlies the flow sequence is generally absent beneath the lowermost ore-bearing channel flow, due to thermal erosion by the flow. Structural deformation renders the shape and continuity of ores more complicated in many instances. Because of their weaker competency compared to their wall rocks, sulphide zones are in many cases strung out along, or cut off by, faults and shear zones. Homogeneous and zoned massive sulphides Komatiitic Ores in Rifted Cratonic Margin Setting Stringer-disseminated ores There are two major Canadian nickel belts in rifted cratonic settings, both being segments of FIGURE 9. Noril’sk-Talnakh: typical stratigraphic profile of an ore-bearing sill (after Distler, the Circum-Superior Belt that encircles a large 1994). part of the northern Superior province. One is had an external source of S. the Raglan horizon in the Cape Smith-Wakeham Bay Belt in the Ungava peninsula of northern Quebec, and the other is Komatiitic Ores in Greenstone Belt Setting the Thompson Nickel Belt in northern Manitoba. Canadian examples of this kind of Ni-Cu deposit are best deRaglan Horizon, Cape Smith-Wakeham Bay Belt: The veloped in the Abitibi Greenstone Belt. The Alexo, Langmuir, Raglan horizon is a series of Ni-Cu ore-bearing komatiitic Redstone, and Texmont mines in the Timmins, Ontario area sills emplaced along the northern contact of the Povungnituk and the Marbridge mine in the Val d’Or area have been minor Group, at the base of the overlying Chukotat Group Sedimentary & metamorphic rocks 213 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert 0 2 Kilometres Wroth Juan Durkin f ro y lt au nF Jua t rus r Th Otte McMahon N Le Gellaty Gordon Gibb Long lt F au Loreto Ken Victor Fisher Lunnon LEGEND Felsic-intermediate intrusive rocks Felsic volcanic and sedimentary rocks Hanging wall basalts Red Hill Hunt Ultramafic rocks Footwall basalt Sedimentary beds Projected Nickel ore shoots or surface occurrences Fault Inferred fault Gold mine FIGURE 10. Kambalda district: geological map (after Gresham and Loftus-Hills, 1981). uted to formation of the ores. The Ni-Cu sulphide deposits of the Raglan horizon have much the same development of ore types as the komatiitic greenstone deposits. The Raglan deposits are basal contact deposits consisting of massive and breccia sulphides at the basal contact, overlain in turn by matrix-textured ores and disseminated sulphides. Tectonic deformation has disrupted and mobilized some of the orebodies. Because of their remoteness and accompanying higher production costs, only the richer deposits can profitably be mined. Thompson Nickel Belt: The Thompson Nickel Belt (TNB) is a portion of the Paleoproterozoic Circum-Superior Belt (Fig. 13), the rifted cratonic margin of the Archean Superior province (Bleeker, 1991). The Ni sulphide ores that characterize the TNB are associated with ultramafic komatiitic sills (1880 Ma; Hulbert et al., 2005) that intrude a sequence of Paleoproterozoic sedimentary cover rocks (Ospwagan Group). The latter consists of conglomerates, greywackes, iron formation, and pelitic and calcareous sediments capped by mafic to ultramafic volcanics. Most rocks have suffered several periods of intense deformation, and amphibolite to granulite facies metamorphism (about 1820 Ma). Paleoproterozoic strata are tightly infolded with the Archean basement gneisses. Original relationships are strongly deformed and obscured. The TNB on the northwest side abuts against the Paleoproterozoic Churchill province along the relatively late Churchill-Superior Boundary fault. The ultramafic sills with which the ore is associated intrude the Pipe Formation of the Ospwagan Group. The Pipe Formation consists of pelitic schists and iron formations. All the known deposits in the Moak Lake-Thompson area are associated with sulphide iron formations of the Pipe Formation. The Pipe 2 and Birchtree ultramafic sills intersect a sulphide iron formation near the base of the Pipe Formation, whereas the Thompson ultramafic sill intersects another sulphide iron formation that is higher in the same pelitic unit. Intense deformation has produced unusual modifications of some of the nickel deposits. Some of the deformational (Fig. 12). Together, these form the southerly leading edge of the Cape Smith-Wakeham Bay Belt, northern Quebec, a thin-skinned thrust belt which overrides the Archean craton. The Povungnituk Group consists of basaltic and rhyolitic volcanic and clastic sedimentary rocks, the products of continental rifting. The Chukotat Group comprises massive and pillowed basalts and related mafic/ ultramafic sills. In addition to the Raglan Horizon of komatiitic sills along the Chukotat contact, there is another wide zone of komatiitic differentiated mafic/ultramafic sills in the interior of the Povungnituk Group. These Paleo-proterozoic suites of komatiitic magmatic rocks (1918 Ma) differ from the greenstone type of komatiites in their lower liquid-equivalent MgO content (up to only 16%–18%) and consequently Ni:Cu ratios of the ores are lower, averaging about 3:1. There are a number of economic Ni-Cu deposits in the Raglan horizon, and as well there are many NiInterflow sediment Komatiitic dunite Aphyric komatiite Cu occurrences elsewhere in this horizon and in (predominantly sulphidic) Massive nickel the ultramafic units lower in the Povungnituk Volcaniclastic breccia Spinifex texture sulphide ore Group. The Raglan sills appear to have richer, Pillow basalt Massive basalt Porphyritic komatiite more abundant sulphide ore, likely because the clastic sediments they intrude are sulphide-rich, FIGURE 11. Generalized section of komatiitic flows and related nickel deposits (after Lesher, and have provided much of the S that contrib- 1989). 214 Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits FIGURE 12. Cape Smith Ungava district: geological map (from Canadian Royalties Inc. Web site). features are due to the weak competency of massive sulphide relative to its wall rocks. The following descriptions are arranged in order of increasing deformational effects experienced by the various deposits. The Pipe 2 nickel deposit consists of massive and stringer sulphide concentrations forming a U shape around the nose of the folded ultramafic sill, and representing the original basal contact sulphide. The Manibridge mineralized ultramafic is laced with pegmatitic dykes that were mobilized out of the surrounding gneisses, and present problems for mining. The Birchtree mine has one ore zone that is an extensive sheet-like shear zone of massive and breccia sulphide. The Soab North mine consists of a partly mineralized ellipsoidal boudin of ultramafic rock with a nearly complete enclosing sheath of massive and breccia sulphide. Ore in the Thompson mine, the principal deposit in the belt, is associated with a highly fragmented ultramafic sill, now dispersed as a zone of ultramafic boudins of all sizes, aligned in a horizon within the pelitic schist unit. The ore consists of nickeliferous sulphides (pyrrhotite-pentlandite) as impregnations in the pelitic schist in a conformable zone that is coextensive with the ultramafic boudins. Massive sulphides are commonly coarsely recrystallized; pentlandite “eyes” up to several cm are not unusual. Other Mafic/Ultramafic Intrusion-Associated Subtypes The host mafic/ultramafic intrusions associated with these Ni-Cu sulphide deposit include a variety of types: multiphase stocks (Lynn Lake, Proterozoic; Råna, Silurian), multiphase chonoliths (Kotalahti, 1885 Ma), multiphase sills (Kanichee and Carr Boyd Rocks, Archean), and highly deformed sills (Selebi-Phikwe, Archean). The styles of mineralization are also varied, including massive sulphides, breccia sulphides, stringers and veins, and disseminated sulphides. Voisey’s Bay is the most important example. Voisey’s Bay: The Ni-Cu sulphide ores at Voisey’s Bay are associated with the troctolitic Voisey’s Bay Intrusion, a part of the anorogenic Nain Plutonic Suite in Labrador. These deposits have similarities to those at Noril’sk in that the role of a feeder system appears crucial to the accumulation of sulphides (Li et al., 2001). The troctolitic intrusions (1290–1340 Ma) straddle the collisional suture (~1850 Ma) between the Archean Nain province gneisses (2843 Ma) to the east and the Paleoproterozoic Churchill (Rae) province gneisses to the west (Ryan et al., 1995; Naldrett et al., 1996; Fig. 14). These intrusions constitute a large magmatic system that includes granites, anorthosite, ferro-diorite, and troctolite. The Voisey’s Bay Intrusion intrudes sulphide-bearing Tasiuyak gneiss of the Churchill province, which appear to have been the source of much of the S essential for forming the magmatic sulphides. The Voisey’s Bay intrusion (Fig. 15) consists of a deep western subchamber of troctolite-olivine gabbro that is connected by a subvertical mineralized feeder dyke of ferrodiorite, olivine gabbro, and troctolite. This dyke extends and 215 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert 98 Moak 56 Mystery Birchtree Thompson Ospwagan Lake Pipe Setting Lake 100 55 N B Wintering Lake T Hambone Soab North Soab South Setting 98 55 Bowden Bucko Manibridge Ni-Cu deposits Ni-Cu mines Serpentinized ultramafic Paleoproterozoic Ospwagan Formation Minago William L. Lake Winnipeg 0 10 20 30 Km FIGURE 13. Thompson Nickel Belt: regional geology (after Hulbert et al., 2005). flattens generally eastward for about 3 km to the Eastern Deeps troctolitic chamber, the largest exposed part of the intrusion. Along this strike length, three main Ni-Cu sulphide zones constitute integral widened parts of the feeder dyke. The Reid Brook mineralized zone (Fig. 15B) in the west is a near-vertical, thickened part of the feeder dyke with a central mineralized Leopard Troctolite (augite oikocrysts), sheathed in a mineralized breccia and transected by steep massive sulphide veins. The Ovoid deposit (Fig. 15C) is the richest ore zone. It is a flat-lying spoon-shaped lens of massive sulphide enveloped in mineralized Leopard and variable-textured troctolite and breccia, representing a widened part of the feeder dyke. The Eastern Deeps zone (Fig. 15D) is located where the feeder dyke widens out into the base of the Eastern Deeps troctolite chamber. At the core of this junction is a massive sulphide lens that expands and extends into the Eastern Deeps chamber. The massive sulphide is enclosed in a complex mineralized sheath of variable textured troctolite, Leopard troctolite, and breccia, similar to the assemblages accompanying the Reid Brook and Ovoid mineralized ores. The feeder system and the Eastern Deeps zone are extensively mineralized in addition to the three zones mentioned above. However, these ores represent sulphide-enriched locations in the feeder system, where it widened and slowed the through-going flow of magma. As a result, the suspended droplets of liquid sulphide settled gravitationally out of the flowing magma and produced accumulations of ponded li- quid sulphides that crystallized to form massive Ni-Cu sulphide. Each of the main ore zones includes veins of crosscutting massive sulphide that transect the other rock units, indicating the later mobility of liquid sulphide. Sulphide assemblages consist of the usual pyrrhotite-penlandite-chalcopyrite, with additional troilite and magnetite. Pyrrhotite grain size is exceptionally coarse, up to 20 cm in the massive sulphide ore, whereas pentlandite forms finer exsolution grains and lamellae. The Ni, Cu, and Co resources for the Voisey’s Bay deposits are given in Table 2. Platinum Group Element (PGE) Deposits Economic Platinum Group Element deposits are extremely rare. Two districts, Bushveld and Noril’sk-Talnakh, supply the majority of the world’s PGE, although Noril’sk-Talnakh has not been considered primarily a PGE deposit (Cawthorn, 1999; Cawthorn et al., 2002). Stillwater (Zientek et al., 2002) is the only other significant PGE producer of this type. Lac des Iles (Hinchey and Lavigne, 2005), small by comparison, is Canada’s only producer of this type of deposit. An obvious feature of the few economic PGE deposits in the world is the large size of their host intrusions. An apparent exception is the smaller Lac des Iles intrusion, but it is just one of a number of comagmatic plutons in the area, which together constitute a significant magma system. Mafic magmas have very low contents of PGE. Despite the high R factor of PGE (e.g., the high partition coefficients of PGE), the sulphide has apparently equilibrated with large proportions of magma to form economic PGE deposits. Another feature shared by most known examples is the small amount of sulphide (less than 3%) with which the PGE are associated. The sparsely disseminated sulphide is mainly chalcopyrite, but also includes pentlandite and pyrrhotite. The PGE minerals occur in very minute quantities that have apparently exsolved from the iron and base metal sulphides during cooling (Cabri, 2002). They include a host of known as well as unnamed minerals. Pentlandite is the only common sulphide mineral that contains a significant amount of any PGE, in this case Pd. The small amount of sulphide appears due to the fact that the only S involved is the original mantle S, with little or no addition from the intruded wall rocks. Because the solubility of S in mafic magmas is quite low, the amount of sulphide produced when the magma reaches saturation is very small, resulting in small, sparsely dispersed sulphides. This is in distinct contrast with Ni-Cu sulphide deposits in which the ore consists of rich concentrations of sulphide. Two distinct modes of PGE deposits are (1) the reef type, and (2) the magmatic breccia type. Of the two, only the reef type has proved to be a major producer. TABLE 2. Voisey’s Bay Resources* Ore type Ore (Mt) Ni % Cu % Co % 31 2.88 1.69 0.14 Additional, indicated 97 1.29 0.61 0.08 Additional, inferred 14 1 0.7 0.06 142 1.61 0.85 0.09 Ovoid deposit (proven) Total *From Inco 2001 Annual Report 216 Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits newly formed sulphide droplets, thus produced then scavenge PGE from the silicate magma Mesoproterozoic and settle to form a sparse sulphide concentraHornblende tion with a rich PGE content as a thin layer on quartz monzonite d the floor of the overlying magma. An alternative Hornblende model proposes PGE carried upward by rising d quartz monzonite drift fluids (Boudreau and McCallum, 1992). "Grey" Bushveld Complex: The Bushveld Complex is d F troctolite d Reid Brook a mafic/ultramafic layered intrusion (2060 Ma) d that extends over an area of 240 by 350 km in Intrusion "Red" the Kapvaal craton, South Africa (Fig. 16A). It troctolite F F is noted not only for its large size, but also for Norite, d d the remarkable lateral extent of the Merensky anorthosite F Voisey's Bay F Ni - Cu - Co Reef and the UG-2 chromitite, the two produWestern F CHURCHILL (RAE) PROVINCE Deposit cing PGE layers (Cawthorn et al., 2002). The Extension "Ovoid" Lake Paleoproterozoic 4N Complex’s total thickness of over 7 km is made F 0 Churchill Lake up of four stratigraphic zones: (1) the Lower Baseline F F 4S gneiss F zone of bronzitites, harzburgites, and dunites; 8S 125 d2 Metadiabase (2) (2) the Critical zone of chromitite, pyroxenEastern ite, norite, and anorthosite, which includes the NAIN PROVINCE Deeps drift Merensky Reef and UG-2 chromitite as well as Archean d2 d2 numerous additional chromitites; (3) the Main Nain zone of norite and gabbronorite with minor angneiss orthosite and pyroxenite; and (4) the Upper zone d Metadiabase (1) of anorthosite, leucogabbro, and diorite, notable Voisey's d2 for numerous magnetitite layers up to 6 m thick. Bay Metagabbro The whole of the sequence represents a simple progression of cumulus minerals (Fig. 16B), but d2 0 1 2 3 Km actual succession of layered units is complex. Much of the Critical zone is made up of cyclic FIGURE 14. Voisey’s Bay district: geological map (after Naldrett, 1997) units, each consisting of all or part of an upward sequence of chromitite, pyroxenite, norite, and anorthosite. Reef Subtype The Merensky Reef occurs near the top of the upper part The reef or stratiform subtype of PGE deposits invariof the Critical zone, and the UG-2 chromitite at varying ably occurs in large, well-layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions depths below the Merensky: about 30 m below at Union, (Naldrett, 1989). The most important examples include the 0 m below at Rustenburg, and 350 m below near Lebowa. Merensky Reef and UG-2 chromitite reef of the Western and The Merensky Reef lies at the base of the Merensky cyclic Eastern Bushveld, the J-M Reef of the Stillwater Complex, unit, below the basal pyroxenite (Fig. 16C). It generally and the Main Sulphide zone of the Great Dyke (Prendergast comprises a thin pegmatoidal feldspathic pyroxenite layer and Wilson, 1989; Oberthuer, 2002). Other examples include about 1 m in thickness, bounded above and below by very the PGE zones in the Penikat (Finland; Alapieti and Lahtinen, thin chromitite layers, and containing sparsely disseminated 2002), Munni Munni (Australia; Barnes et al., 1992), and the Cu-Ni sulphides (up to 3%). The UG-2 chromitite occurs at Rincon del Tigre (Bolivia; Prendergast, 2000) layered intruthe base of the UG-2 cyclic unit. It ranges from 70 to 130 cm sions. All PGE reefs are typically more or less conformable, in thickness, and has the same lateral extent as the Merensky relatively thin layers (from less than one to a few metres) Reef (see Fig. 16A). Estimated resources contained in the within the well-layered sequence of the intrusions. No signifitwo reefs and the Platreef (discussed below) are shown in cant examples are known in Canada. Table 3 (Cawthorn, 1999). The genesis of the Merensky and J-M reefs remains controThe PGE grade of the Merensky Reef is surprisingly universial. Because of their great lateral extent (virtually a single form throughout the lateral extent of the unit, ranging belayer within the whole of each large intrusion) and the thintween 4.9 and 7.3 g/t. This is despite considerable variation ness of the reefs, it is appealing to call on a magmatic process along strike in the platinum group mineral assemblages, operating during the course of formation of the layered intruwhich include alloys, sulphides, tellurides, and arsenides. sions. The most generally accepted model involves the mixA feature common to sulphide reef-type deposits in laying of the residual magma remaining after partial crystallizaered intrusions is that they tend to occur at, or some distance tion with a new pulse of magma emplaced above it (Campbell above, the contact between the lower ultramafic zone and the et al., 1983). It has been demonstrated experimentally that upper mafic zone. The Bushveld and Stillwater reefs occur this mixing mechanism can induce sulphide saturation. The some distance above the contact, and the Hartley and Munni NAIN PLUTONIC SUITE 2800E 600E 1200E 1600E 800W Anaktalik Bay 217 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert TABLE 3. Bushveld Complex PGE Resources Eastern Bushveld Merensky UG2 Western Bushveld (N.) Merensky UG2 Western Bushveld (S.) Merensky UG2 Northern Bushveld Platreef Total Bushveld: Pt g/t Pd g/t Mt 3.2 2.4 1.4 2 1320 2035 3.2 2.4 1.4 2 435 675 3.2 2.4 1.4 2 760 1530 1.3 1.4 3060 2.3 1.7 9815 Tonnages and total average grades are calculated from the grade and total ounces of Pt and Pd estimated by von Gruenewaldt, as cited in Cawthorn, 1999. Munni reefs (Barnes et al., 1992) lie immediately below this contact. Magmatic Breccia Subtype The magmatic breccia subtype of PGE mineralization is characterized by a large zone of sparsely disseminated sulphide in a mafic magmatic host that has a high proportion of breccia clasts, both cognate and exotic. The most important example of this subtype is the Platreef district in the Northern Bushveld Complex, South Africa. Two similar Canadian deposits are in the River Valley intrusion (Tardif, 2000) and the Marathon deposit in the Coldwell Complex (Barrie et al., 2002). These deposits all comprise semiconformable zones of PGE mineralization in a basal breccia unit of a layered mafic/ ultramafic intrusion. The Lac des Iles PGE deposit in Canada is different from the preceding examples in that the intrusion is a multiphase stock-like body rather than a layered intrusion. Nevertheless, the deposit comprises disseminated sulphide in a mafic magmatic breccia (Fig. 17), and on this basis, is grouped in this subtype. Lac des Iles: The Lac des Iles intrusion (2738 Ma) intrudes a Neoarchean gneissic tonalitic terrane. It is one of a 30 kmdiametre ring of similar intrusions, and on a larger scale, part of an ENE-trending zone of mafic plutons (Lavigne and Michaud, 2002; Hinchey and Lavigne, 2005). The intrusion consists essentially of a gabbronorite elliptical core, enveloped by a border unit of varitextured gabbro. The Roby Ore zone lies between these two units at the west end of the intrusion and is made up of a combination of varitextured gabbro, which is matrix to a heterolithic gabbro breccia. The varitextured gabbro contains abundant coarse-grained and pegmatitic patches, and the clasts in the heterolithic breccia are mostly cognate mafic rock types. A 20 m-wide north-trending dyke- FIGURE 15. Voisey’s Bay ore deposits: (A) Plan of the Voisey’s Bay intrusion feeder and associated ore zones (after Li et al., 2001). The ores are projected to surface. (B) Reid Brook zone (after Li and Naldrett, 1999). (C) Ovoid orebody (after Li and Naldrett, 1999). (D) Eastern Deeps (after Li et al., 2001). 218 Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits 26 00' 28 00' Bushveld Granite Suite Bushveld Granophyre Suite Layered rocks of Bushveld Rooiberg Felsite Group ? Merensky Reef and UG-2 Platinum mine (major [active], minor) City 30 00' ? BRPM Impala Pandora Rustenberg Kroondal Lonmin E&W km Pretoria 28 00' 100 Mag. B 24 00' PPRust (PlatreefSandsloot) Lebowa Messina Marula ? Driekop ? Mooihoek Onverwacht Amandelbult Northam Union 0 A PGE and saussuritized feldspar. The PGE minerals are mainly braggite, merenskyite, and kotulskite. The stock-like Lac des Iles PGE deposit may represent a conduit for mineralized magmatic breccia. If intruded to a higher level in the crust, such a magmatic breccia could have been emplaced as the stratiform basal PGE-mineralized breccia unit of a layered intrusion such as the Platreef, the River Valley intrusion, or the Marathon deposit. Exploration Models Because magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE sulphide deposits are invariably associated with mafic and/or ultramafic magmatic bodies, such bodies constitute the first-order target for exploration. From the preceding accounts, it is clear that the different types of deposits are associated with different suites of mafic and/or ultramafic rocks, each of which have somewhat different but typical attributes. LEGEND District Scale The Voisey’s Bay discovery has emphasized, Magnetite as is also the case at Noril’sk-Talnakh, the im4.5m seam portance of relatively small intrusions as parts of large magmatic systems. Their role as conduits for large volumes of magma provides sites for Merensky Reef accumulations of settled sulphide out of the passMerensky ing magma. At Voisey’s Bay, a dyke-like conduit Reef that led from one magma chamber to a higher Pegmatoid 0 Main one contains the ores. At Noril’sk-Talnakh, sills chromite are the conduits that appear to have fed the flood basalts, and in which the sulphide ores formed. 0.5 Although of different geometries, the conduits record the passage of differing magmas by ex1.0m hibiting significant differentiation: well-layered Vertical scale at Noril’sk-Talnakh (Fig. 9), distinct dyke facies C at Voisey’s Bay (Fig. 15B,C). In the case of the FIGURE 16. Bushveld Complex: (A) Geological map showing the trace of the Merensky Reef Jinchuan deposits, the exposed ore-laden intruand platinum mines (modified after Campbell et al., 1983); (B) Stratigraphic range of cumulus sion itself may be a feeder to a much larger layminerals over the 4 zones of the complex (after Campbell et al., 1983); (C) Typical local straered magmatic complex, now largely removed by tigraphy of the Merensky Reef and profile of PGE grade (after Naldrett, 1989). erosion. If this interpretation is correct, the target within a large mafic magmatic province would be like pyroxenite lies between the Roby Ore Zone and the barsmaller differentiated cognate intrusions that may represent ren gabbronorite to the east, and effectively marks the eastern magma conduits. boundary of mineralization. Komatiitic deposits occur in small to medium-sized sills The PGE mineralized Roby Ore zone is 950 m long by 8 m and flows that invariably include ultramafic rocks, either wide and is distinguished by the presence of up to 3 percent alone or with mafic differentiates, usually gabbros. Those irregularly disseminated sulphides. These include chalcopyrin greenstone belts tend to occupy a limited range of straite, pyrrhotite, pentlandite, and pyrite as grains and patches of tigraphy at the district or regional scale. Thus, they form submillimetre to a few centimetres size. Sulphide mineralizaclusters of ultramafic lenses along strike of formations as at tion is coextensive with the varitextured gabbro breccia. PGE the Langmuir and Redstone mines near Timmins, Ontario, mineralization is Pd-rich (Pd:Pt = 9:1) and is locally erraticor whole formations as at Kambalda (Fig. 10). Similarly, ally distributed, but on a mine scale is more or less uniform the komatiitic deposits in cratonic margin rift settings occur (Fig. 18). A higher grade zone (about 5 g/t) is localized on in lenticular ultramafic sills strung out along strike in long a 400 m-long portion of the western part of the pyroxenite linear belts as at Thompson (Fig. 13) and Raglan horizon dyke and a parallel portion of the adjoining varitextured gab(Fig. 12). These groupings of target rocks focus exploration bro/heterolithic breccia. Within this higher-grade zone, the at a district scale. silicates are hydrothermally altered to amphibole, chlorite, Ultramafic rocks associated with any of the deposit types Augite Bronzite Cr. Anorthosite leuconorite Norite Pyroxenite, melanorite Chromite seam Olivine Bronzite Olivine Ultramafic Plagioclase Mafic grade 219 O.R. Eckstrand and L.J. Hulbert Lac Des Iles Baker Zone Roby Pit Phase 3 Shear Ore Roby Zone 0.5 Diabase Felsic Intrusives Leucograbbo/Gabbro Varitextured Gabbro Heterolithic Gabbro Breccia Gabbronorite Gabbronorite Breccia Magnetite Gabbronorite Hornblende Gabbro Clinopyroxenite Samples > 2.5 g/T Pd Samples > 0.7 g/T Pd Twighlight Zone Moore Zone 0 Creek Zone 1 km Camp Lake Drill Core Sample >1 g/T Pd+Pt Outline of Ore Zones - 2000 Faults 500m 1000m FIGURE 17. Lac des Isle: geological map of intrusion (after Lavigne and Michaud, 2002). W E 500m sulphide-rich ores are most likely to be found at the base of those bodies. Determination of the base of a given body is, thus, an important part of exploration targeting. Within the komatiitic greenstone belt type, the ores are generally located in the lowest flow, which is also generally the most primitive in the pile of flows. Some ores may lie at a somewhat higher level. In areas that have been intensely deformed and/or faulted, the distribution pattern of sulphide-rich zones may be more complex. For instance, in the Thompson Nickel Belt, some of the sulphide ores are extended far beyond the parent ultramafic bodies. The exploration of large layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions for PGE deposits should be focused from just below to some distance above the main ultramafic-mafic contact. This is the stratigraphic range of most of the PGE-rich layers in the Bushveld, Stillwater, Great Dyke, Munni Munni, and Rincon del Tigre deposits. Because chromite is commonly a mineral associated with PGE deposits (e.g., the UG-2 reef in the Bushveld Complex), geochemical surveys should include Cr as well as the obvious suite consisting of Ni, Cu, Co, Pt, and Pd. Electromagnetic surveys designed to detect conductors should be effective in locating the sulphide-rich (i.e., massive, breccia, and matrix-textured sulphide) deposits. IP methods may identify disseminated sulphides, but the presence of serpentinization in the ultramafic host may render the technique ineffective. Recent Advances A much better appreciation of the role of magma dynamics in the concentration and enrichment of magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE sulphide deposits has developed in the last decade or two. The importance of changes in fluid flow, particuNorth America Palladium Ltd. larly decreases in the rate of flow of magmas, FIGURE 18. Lac des Isle: west-east section showing grade distribution (after Lavigne and has become clearer. The location of sulphide Michaud, 2002). concentrations in conduits at Talnakh-Noril’sk and Voisey’s Bay, and near conduits in certain of the komatiitic deposits, suggests that sulphides accumulate have, in most terranes (especially greenschist facies metawhere the flow rate of magma was reduced and the entrained morphism), undergone serpentinization with the accomsulphides were able to settle gravitationally to form rich basal panying generation of magnetite. Consequently these bodies concentrations. typically have a well-defined magnetic response. Low-level aeromagnetic surveys thus are indispensable at early explorNickel depletion of mafic magmatic rocks in connection ation stages, especially in poorly exposed areas. with the existence of Ni sulphide deposits has become better Large layered intrusions are the prime targets in exploradocumented. It was anticipated that the formation of nickeliftion for PGE deposits, and have been recognized in many erous liquid sulphide in a magma resulted by extraction of regions. However, there may still be unidentified bodies in nickel from the magma, thereby leaving the magma depleted some poorly exposed or poorly mapped areas. Magnetic and in nickel. Documentation has supported this theory, and it gravity surveys could be of use in these areas. now plays a part in exploration strategy. Pd Pdgrade Grade 0m > 5.0 g/tone 2.5 to 5.0 g/tonne 0.70 to 2.50 g/tonne 0.35 to 0.70 g/tonne < 0.35 g/tonne Outline of Phase 3 Pit Present Surface Outline of Pyroxenite Unit Local Scale Sulphide-rich Ni-Cu deposits achieve their concentrations mostly through the settling effects of gravity. Consequently, in virtually all magmatic bodies (sills, flows, and dykes), the 220 Knowledge Gaps One of the gaps in our knowledge of Ni-Cu sulphide deposits is knowing the most important factor in triggering sulphide saturation in a given magma. Certain things are clear. Magmatic Nickel-Copper-Platinum Group Element Deposits The magma must have a sufficient dissolved content of Ni, Cu, and PGE. Once a liquid sulphide is formed, it will tend to equilibrate with the magma, and this means acquiring the Ni, Cu, and PGE from the magma according to the partition coefficients for those elements. It also is clear that much of the S in magmatic Ni-Cu sulphide deposits has been derived from sulphidic wall rocks, commonly pyritic sediments. Thus, addition of S to the magma by incorporation of such material leads to sulphide saturation. However, it is also known that by increasing the silica content of the magma through incorporation of siliceous wall rock, the solubility of sulphide in the magma is decreased, thereby producing sulphide saturation. It remains unclear which of the two mechanisms is the more critical in producing sulphide saturation. The significance for exploration is whether it is essential to have wall rock rich in sulphide as a source of S in order to better evaluate a priori the nickel potential of a given mafic/ultramafic body. Existing evidence tends to favor the sulphidic wall rock theory, but more investigation of the settings of known nickel sulphide deposits is needed in order to evaluate the importance of the alternative theory. In the case of PGE reef type deposits, there is still ongoing controversy over the main mechanism of concentration of PGE in the thin extensive “reefs” that are hosted in very large layered mafic/ultramafic intrusions. 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